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A review of world archaeology

Auteur--

Editor--

Jaar2017

PublicatietypeAflevering

SerieAntiquity

Volume356

Subtitel--

Pagina’s283-564

UitgeverAntiquity Trust

PlaatsCambridge

ISBN--

Citation key--

Trefwoorden--

Plaatsgegevens

Exemplaar8730 ReknummerT-2-2-b

Inhoud
Editorial 383-288
Scarre C.
  • New discoveries in China , pp. 286-287
  • Archaeology in the mail , pp. 287-288

A Late Pleistocene woman from Tham Lod, Thailand: the influence of today on a face from the past 289-303
Hayes S., Shoocongdej R., Pureepatpong N., Sangvichien S. & Chintakanon K.

Dating Knossos and the arrival of the earliest Neolithic in the southern Aegean 304-321
Douka K., Efstratiou N., Hald M. M., Steen Henriksen P. & Karetsou A.
  • Brief history of excavations , pp. 305-307
  • Previous chronology , p. 307
  • New AMS 14C dates and the current chronological framework , pp. 307-309

The earliest directly dated rock paintings from southern Africa: new AMS radiocarbon dates 322-333
Bonneau A., Pearce D., Mitchell P., Staff R., Arthur C., Mallen L., Brock F. & Higham T.
  • Rock art sites , pp. 324-327
  • Methods , pp. 327-329
  • Results and discussion , pp. 329-332

Re-theorising mobility and the formation of culture and language among the Corded Ware Culture in Europe 334-347
Kristiansen K., Allentoft M. E., Frei K. M., Iversen R., Johannsen N. N., Kroonen G., Pospieszny L., Price T. D., Rasmussen S., Sjögren K.-G. & et al.
  • Re-theorising migrations , pp. 335-337
  • The formation of the Yamnaya and Corded Ware Cultures , pp. 337-340
  • Language dispersal and the formation of Proto-Germanic in northern Europe , pp. 340-342

Kossinna's smile 348-359
Heyd V.
  • 2000 years of interaction , p. 351
  • A Europe-wide horizon of change , pp. 351-357

The earliest evidence of pattern looms: Han Dynasty tomb models from Chengdu, China 360-374
Zhao F., Wang Y., Lou Q., Long B., Zhang B., Xia Y., Xie T., Wu S & Xiao L.
  • The Laoguanshan discovery , pp. 361-366
  • Han Dynasty jin silk , pp. 366-368
  • Pattern-loom operating system , p. 368

China and the steppe: reception and resistance 375-388
Rawson J.
  • Geography: the arc and central China , pp. 376-378
  • From the steppe to China , pp. 378-385
  • The arc and the rise of the Qin state , pp. 385-386

Protohistoric graveyards of the Swat Valley, Pakistan, new light on funerary practices and absolute chronology 389-405
Vidale M. & Micheli R.
  • Previous research , pp. 391-392
  • New funerary evidence from the field . Wooden architecture at Udegram , pp. 392-396
  • Re-opened graves and secondary burials , pp. 396-399
  • Absolute chronology , pp. 399-402
  • Early evidence of iron artefacts at Udegram , pp. 402-403

The Uffington White Horse geoplyph as sun-horse 406-420
Pollard J.
  • The Uffington geogplyph: its setting and its date , pp. 407-408
  • Reading the horse , pp. 408-412
  • The image as sun-horse , pp. 412-415
  • The Uffington complex , pp. 415-417
  • Maintaining the horse , pp. 417-418

Cultural spaces inside and outside caves: a study in Guam, western Micronesia 421-441
Carson M. T.
  • Ritidian Caves , pp. 422-424
  • Ritidian between 1500 and 1100 BC , pp. 424-432
  • Ritidian between 1100 and 700 BC , pp. 432-435
  • Ritidian beetween 700 BC and AD 1 , p. 435
  • Between AD 1 and 500 , pp. 435-436
  • Between AD 500 and 1000 , p. 436
  • Between AD 1000 and 1700 , pp. 436-438

Two tales of one city: data, inference and Carthaginian infant sacrifice 442-454
Schwartz J. H., Houghton F. D., Bondioli L. & Macchiarelli R.
  • Prior osteological analyses of Carthage Tophet urn contents , pp. 444-445
  • What the bones tell us , pp. 445-446
  • A refutation? . Only sacrifice can account for individuals in the Carthage Tophet , pp. 446-447
  • A refutation? . Bone shrinkage , p. 447
  • A refutation? . Tooth-crown shrinkage , pp. 447-449
  • A refutation? . Neonatal lines , p. 449
  • A refutation? . Do other studies support the 'all-sacrifice' theory? , pp. 449-450
  • A refutation? . Animal remains , pp. 450-451
  • A refutation? . Yet another justification of the 'all-sacrifice' theory? , p. 451

Development of an early city in Central Mexico: the Tlalancaleca Archaeological Project 455-473
Murakami T., Kabata S., López J. J. M. & Chávez V. J. J.
  • Tlalancaleca and early urbanism in Central Mexico , pp. 457-460
  • The Tlalancaleca Archaeological Project: 2012-2015 field seasons , pp. 460-462
  • Development trajectories of Tlalancaleca , pp. 462-470

The Malian Lakes Region redefined: archaeological survey of the Gorbi Valley 474-489
Coutros P. R.

The perfect storm: climate change and ancient Maya response in the Puuc Hills region of Yucatán 490-509
Smyth M. P., Dunning N. P., Weaver E. M., van Beynen P. & Ortegón Zapata D.
  • Field archaeology at Xcoch , pp. 492-494
  • Harvesting rain , pp. 494-496
  • Storing water , pp. 496-499
  • Demographic reconstruction , pp. 499-501
  • Speleothem analysis , pp. 501-506

Maritime hominin dispersals in the Pleistocene: advancing the debate 510-519
Leppard T. P. & Runnels C.
  • Introduction: oceans as inhibitors or enablers of dispersal? , pp. 510-511
  • Clarifying the debate , pp. 511-512
  • Advancing the debate . Intrinsic limitations in the data: the Ronbinson Crusoe problem , pp. 513-514
  • Advancing the debate . Modes of dispersal and structural homologies on the Eurasian fringe , pp. 514-515
  • Advancing the debate . Investigation and demonstration of maritime hominin dispersals in the Pleistocene , pp. 515-516

Social science and archaeological enquiry 520-528
Smith M. E.

Byzantine buildings: monumental architecture at Miletus and Resafa 529-532
Pülz A. & Eichner I.

History, politics and meaning among the Classic Period Maya of the southern lowlands 533-535
Hutson S. R.
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